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1stwahine
January 30th, 2005, 06:08 PM
:mad: I WAS BUSY WRITING A STORY AND JUST GOT THE END OF THE REPORT FROM THAT GRUMPY OLD GUY ON 60 MINUTES...THEY WORK LESS IN HAWAI'I AND ..... THAN SOMETHING, SOMETHING, SOMETHING. ANYBODY GOT THE WHOLE MESSAGE? I DON'T THINK WE WORK ANY LESS THAN ANY PLACE ELSE. WE PAY ALOT MORE IF ANYTHING! HURRY UP, I LIKE SEND ONE EMAIL TO CBS!
kimo55
January 30th, 2005, 06:28 PM
:mad: I WAS BUSY WRITING A STORY ...
eh. aunty:
how come you angry?!
http://42.com/rasmusoftwares/shopsite/allcaps.html
1stwahine
January 30th, 2005, 06:44 PM
eh. aunty:
how come you angry?!
http://42.com/rasmusoftwares/shopsite/allcaps.html
:D You got me this time KIMO...thanks, I needed to laugh.
pzarquon
January 31st, 2005, 05:40 AM
Here's what Rooney said (http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005/01/27/60minutes/rooney/main669810.shtml), from the "60 Minutes" site at CBS.com:
Weather is always interesting, and snow is the most interesting bad weather we get. There isn’t any other weather that's so much fun...
One of the interesting things about all this is that people who live where there's a lot of bad weather, ice and snow, seem to get more done than people who live where it's sunny and warm all day.
Hawaii is a great state for a vacation -- really lovely. But I don’t think people who live in Hawaii do as much work as the people do who live in Alaska, Maine or North Dakota.
Who knows. He may be right. Working hard is a good thing. But so is having a happy life. And I'm pretty sure I woudn't be as happy in North Dakota. To each their own.
scrivener
January 31st, 2005, 05:51 AM
I think Andy Rooney is right. A friend of mine, who moved here from Oklahoma, commented for years on the number of holidays we get here (commented, not complained!) and I got kinda annoyed one Kuhio Day, so I did a check for state holidays in Oklahoma, certain that every state must have similar numbers of state holidays. I was wrong. Oklahoma, and many other states I checked out, have pretty much only the usual federal holidays as official state holidays. These other states don't take days off from work to honor royalty (Kamehameha Day and Kuhio Day) or statehood (Statehood Day, formerly Admissions Day).
Now, if you ask me, the fact that we take so many holidays is a good thing. Good for the economy, good for our general health, and good for our mental health. We have the longest expected life-span in the nation, and I don't think it's because of Portuguese sausage and kalua pig.
1stwahine
January 31st, 2005, 06:01 AM
I took it as an insult due to his referring that "WE" don't work hard as those from the other states! Even if we are happy, do we tend to work less? I would think that we worker harder...like the Sever Dwarfs singing,"Hi He, Hi Ho, Off to Work We Go!" Have a great week everyone! Remember to be HAPPY! :D
Miulang
January 31st, 2005, 06:50 AM
It is true that people who live in warmer climates tend to move more slowly (the body's way of compensating) to keep from burning up. Couple that with high humidity, who WOULD want to move quickly?
And I really do think people in Hawai'i are more stress-free than people up here on the Mainland. ("Ain't no beeg ting")
So wat if you work outside you work more slow? Eh, gotta conserve da energy, anden! Those of you who work in climate controlled offices have no excuse: work as hard and be as stressed out as the rest of us in colder climes! :)
Miulang
Linkmeister
January 31st, 2005, 08:52 AM
Mom reminded me that a few years ago Rooney's daughter was robbed while here on a vacation, and that he had some unkind (legitimately so, I'd say) things to say about Hawai'i back then. So this may be residual.
kimo55
January 31st, 2005, 09:05 AM
Mom reminded me that a few years ago Rooney's daughter was robbed while here on a vacation, and that he had some unkind (legitimately so, I'd say) things to say about Hawai'i back then. So this may be residual.
probably.
Rooney: " people in Hawaii dont do much work at all (to find the robbery suspects who stole from my daughter...)"
Miulang
January 31st, 2005, 09:11 AM
And the locals would say, "Lolo tourist! Why she neva wen go hide her stuffs so nobody can cockaroach 'em den?!" :D
Miulang
Glen Miyashiro
January 31st, 2005, 09:22 AM
There's a long tradition, dating back to the bad old colonial days, of saying that it's the cold-climate Northern Europeans who do all the real work, and that everyone in the tropics is lazy. Obviously, the idea hasn't gone away. :mad:
scrivener
January 31st, 2005, 09:28 AM
I am lazy.
Miulang
January 31st, 2005, 09:36 AM
There's a long tradition, dating back to the bad old colonial days, of saying that it's the cold-climate Northern Europeans who do all the real work, and that everyone in the tropics is lazy. Obviously, the idea hasn't gone away. :mad:
It's not all myth, Glenn. It's a physiological fact that people in colder climates have to move more in order to keep their body temperature higher (other wise they would freeze to death). People in warmer climates need to slow down (and drink lots of water!) in order to keep their internal body thermostats regulated so they don't burn out.
The observations of our Puritanical, colonial founders was based on an observation that was later proved to be scientific fact.
Miulang
kimo55
January 31st, 2005, 09:46 AM
People in warmer climates need to slow down (and drink lots of water!)
Miulang
or drink other things.
The icon of the beachcomber casually stretched out under a palm tree with a worn woven hat atop his head, holding a maitai.... back a while ago... was almost as ubiquitous an image as was the sombrero'ed pancho wearing guy sleeping against the cactus, representing the supposed laziness of south o da border...
pzarquon
January 31st, 2005, 09:57 AM
Movement does not equal productivity. Besides, moving more to keep warm can just as easily mean that energy is being wasted on comfort and survival, when it could've been devoted more wholly to "work."
kimo55
January 31st, 2005, 10:05 AM
Movement does not equal productivity.
yea, man!
when I'm languidly splayed out under the palms on Lanikai beach, sipping my Hinano, i am brainstorming on current projects and productions!
Much work being enacted at those moments.
Miulang
January 31st, 2005, 10:30 AM
Yeah, I do some of my best work when "I'm testing my eyelids for pinholes", too! Kimo and I practice "tangential thinking". Did you know that a lot of the most famous scientific inventions came about by accident?
Did you ever notice how you can concentrate on solving a problem or remembering a name, but no matter how hard you try, you can't remember? And then in the middle of the night the answer comes to you?
For instance, Dr. Jonas Salk invented the formula for the Salk vaccine while engaged in a very lengthy tennis game.
Would Newton have been able to describe gravity if he hadn't been standing under that apple tree (this one may be a myth, but the one about Jonas Salk is true).
Moral of the story: if you have a problem, don't waste energy trying to solve it. Go do something else and when you least expect it, your brain is going to come up with the solution....now all you have to remember is what the problem was you were trying to solve! :D
Miulang
kimo55
January 31st, 2005, 10:48 AM
Moral of the story: if you have a problem, don't waste energy trying to solve it. Go do something else and when you least expect it, your brain is going to come up with the solution..
Miulang
the subconcious contains all the answers, they say.
Glazier anology;
concious mind, the top 10% of the glacier.
Subconcious mind, the majority 90% of the glacier body, the brain/mind.
Apparently , you can train the subconcious to bring the answer to the forefront; meditate on the problem or question just before sleep, and declare to the subconcious to solve it. Upon awaking, oftimes we have the solution.
it's a famous Einstein (or Edison?) method.
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